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This Week In Tumblr: February 28th, 2010!

Sunday, February 28th, 2010


Langdon Graves gentle, somewhat off-kilter drawings.


Louie Cordero’s Having Reached Climax at Age 28 … I am a zombie — made of styrofoam, acrylics, and cement, 2006.


Amborama on Flickr.


Michael Kenna’s Quixote’s Giants, Study 2, 1998


Paul Ulrich

This Week In Tumblr: February 21st, 2010!

Sunday, February 21st, 2010


Jonathan Zawada takes some age-old surrealistic influences and adds some mythical creature all up in them.


Fenk’s photography certainly captures the vibrance of life…


Heather Jansch’s horse might look like the Bodies Exhibit gone animal, but it’s actually made out of driftwood! Thank god!


One of Ray Caesar’s common characters seems to give up the ghost in a glowing, gold leaf-lined kind-of-way.


Huskmelk goes nuts with designs for Michael Jackson-related prints, and this might be our favorite from them.

This Week In Tumblr: February 14th, 2010!

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

We’re going to save you from all of the Valentine’s Day hearts we just posted, and simply go with some good, neutral, non-love-related art.


Lissy Elle’s most recent works seem to combine fantasy stories and fashion to study the contours of the human body in a fanciful setting. But she’s not all pretty things, either; her older pieces can get quite raw. It seems that she is on a photo-a-day 365-day photo journey, and it’s astounding how far she’s come in that time period. You can go through her Flickr to see the progression.

Below is another recent piece of hers, of which she says:

“My Sunday school teacher once told me when I was little, that she always pictured God as just hands, holding the universe in his palms.”


Stuntkid throws female illustrations into clean, vibrant worlds with gentle linework. Mmm.


Fabulous wood-burning art on paddles, by Onionize.


This is an amazing show poster by Charles Bergquist. It is highly, highly recommended that you visit his website and view his other print works as well as videos of projections he has made.


Photography by Alex MacLean, who takes truly astounding aerial photographs which make us realize we truly underestimate how much we know about our world.


An image by Aurel Schmidt, who doesn’t seem to currently have a website — and frankly, she doesn’t really need one. She’s shown at the Saatchi Gallery, has been featured on Fecal Face, and was at ArtBasel.

This Week In Tumblr: February 7th, 2010!

Sunday, February 7th, 2010


A diptych by Levan Kakabadze


Hydrogen, by Schühle Lewis, which Lewis says is good for Physicists and Scientists and bad for Creationists. The image is based off of a quote by Edward R. Harrison, which can be found here.


Artist Morgan Blair is all about bright colors and abstract shapes. Her website is dizzying, but a lot of her pieces intersperse geometric shapes with well-drawn figures, and it is these that are most interesting. See below.


Recoat’s Good Wives And Warriors.


Caitlin Hackett combines beauty with decay in this amazingly illustrated Vulpes Masquerade.


Digital collage by Katty Bouthier that is simple but otherworldly.


A drawing by Chris Scarborough that turns this deer into quite a mound of shapes.

This Week In Tumblr: January 31st, 2010!

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

There’s a lot of crap on Tumblr. Here’s our weekly update that sorts through the crap to bring you the best of the week. (Click here to add us on Tumblr.) This is a big week for photography, so hopefully you like that!


There was a time when 3-dimensional-crafted shapes were all the rage on the internet and gracing the covers of electronic albums everywhere. For large part, that trend died down due to the fact that the shapes started looking much too artificial; they were unsophisticated polygons with no real textures or moods other than “metallic” or “clean.” Paul Lee has managed to take these polygons, manipulating them in a way that keeps them current.


Photography by Swedish multi-disciplinary artist John Falk Rodén, who runs his own creative company with his partner, Andreas Lewandowski, called Ajja.


Minimalistic photography that will take your breath away, by Thorsten Konrad. Oceans are frequently calming, but this takes that almost to another level.


Buttonmooon weeds through vintage cameras and film to create images like this that are basked in saturated colors. This could quite possibly be the album cover for the latest indie singer-songwriter.


Al Magnus combines photography with manipulation to create that walk the line between fantasy and reality. (And maybe gives a heads up to Wizard Of Oz?)


Gunta Stölzl, German artist. This is a wall hanging from 1931; she was ages ahead of the current hipster trends in textile art and patterning. Ages!

This Week In Tumblr: January 24th, 2010!

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

There’s a lot of crap on Tumblr. Here’s our weekly update that sorts through the crap to bring you the best of the week. (Click here to add us on Tumblr.)


Rodney Smith’s elegant vintage photographs. He also has 3,000 pieces of stock photography, browsable by keyword! Amazing!


Mario Wagner fuses grungy textures with collage. This piece is Control the World for Sony Playstation / Vice Magazine.


Polish painter Jacek Yerka’s fantasy worlds are hazardly beautiful.


Jonathan Calugi’s style seems to give illustrations typographic treatment.


David O’Brien’s geometric explosions. What’s even better: the explosion is not just mere geometric shapes; it’s fucking little people! Actually, they’re called memes, and they represent singular ideas, symbols, or practices. You can read more about them on O’Brien’s website here. But see below for details:


Mutant HandsPea Stag. Sure, animals are played out, but at least this is a little different from your typical animal drawing.


Naoko Ito’s Ubiquitous takes the oft-used theme of urban nature and explores it in a new, spatially-challenging way.


Kathy Liao’s Making Face - Juicy Goodbye (with love) is a huge mixed media on canvas piece, at 70″ x 60″! Holy!


Andre Meca’s Explosions Of Colors And Shapes is pretty much exactly that.